CPS Buys Land For New South Loop Elementary School

Chicago Public Schools is paying nearly $9 million to rehab a vacant post office garage into a new South Loop elementary school. View Full Caption

DNAinfo/Ted Cox (File)

SOUTH LOOP — South Loop Elementary School is getting a new building.

The Chicago Board of Education moved Wednesday to buy and replace a vacant post office facility at 16th and Dearborn streets with a new building for South Loop Elementary School, one of the city's most overcrowded schools in one of its fastest-growing neighborhoods.

South Loop Elementary, 1212 S. Plymouth Court, opened for 580 students in 1988 but now has 839, according to Chicago Public Schools. And the South Loop, one of the few city neighborhoods growing in population, is slated for thousands of new homes arriving in the next decade.

The new school will accommodate up to 1,200 students.

"The new building would alleviate current overcrowding, while also accounting for future population growth in the area," CPS spokesman Michael Passman said in a statement.

CPS did not share when construction of the new school building would start, but the project is expected to take three years, according to Tara Shelton, South Loop Elementary's principal.

"I know that your hard work contributed to these exciting plans for South Loop School," Shelton wrote to parents Thursday. "We will be forever grateful for all the work that has gotten us to this point."